[Vo]:Neutrons

2012-09-23 Thread Danny Ross Lunsford
How sophisticated is neutron counting in these experiments and how 
frequent? It's possible I guess that one of these experiments could 
produce a burst of neutrons of some non-negligible danger to the lab 
personnel. You would think this would be closely monitored.

The neutron's role in all this is vaguely unsettling.

Sorry for my slip up earlier.

--
I write a little. I erase a lot. - Chopin



Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Eric Walker
On Sat, Sep 22, 2012 at 10:19 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

I would be concerned about the cost of platinum.  Stainless steel might
 work since it is un reactive.


The problem of cost is an important one, since we're talking about a
tabletop experiment.

The danger of falling back upon unreactive materials such as gold, carbon
and stainless steel is that they are only relatively inert under chemical
reactions.  Under proton or deuteron capture, for example, they are quite
reactive:

- 197Au + p - 194Pt + α + 8.4 MeV
- 197Au + D - 199Hg + 11 MeV
- 12C + D - 13C + p + 2.7 MeV
- 52Cr + p - 53Mn + 6.6 MeV (chromium is an ingredient in stainless steel)

I appreciate that there is no consensus on this list that proton and
deuteron capture are taking place, and beyond that, there is incredulity.
 But people such as Ed Storms take the possibility seriously, and the
numbers are very suggestive when one looks at the transmutation results in
the aggregate.  So if it might be the case that these processes are
occurring, this dimension can be included in a search for suitable controls
as well as possibly being used for further investigation.  Not taking it
into account could lead to frustrated attempts to find a blank -- and it
occurs to me that this itself is an interesting detail.

Taking a second look at carbon, I see that it is inert under proton
capture, so graphite might actually be a good choice or hydrogen-1 after
all (but not hydrogen-2).  But at the moment I'm looking at data for an
experiment in which palladium was used with hydrogen-1; along the lines
I've been suggesting in previous posts, this would be a good combination
for a control run, since proton capture is not energetically favorable in
palladium.  This turns out to be too simplistic an approach, however; in
the case of this experiment, the choice of electrolyte, Na2CO3, appears to
have been important, and isotope shifts in the vicinity of sodium were
observed, in addition to many others.  For similar reasons, the material of
the container could be important -- teflon (with carbon and fluorine in
it), pyrex (with boron) and stainless steel, for example, might all be
susceptible to whatever processes are taking place within the active
material nearby.

So if proton and deuteron capture are occurring, the search for a control
may need to take into account not just the substrate and the isotope of
hydrogen, but the composition of the electrolyte and container as well.
 Once we start talking about deuterium, the search for a control system
that meets the present criteria becomes nearly impossible, because
deuterium can combine in exothermic reactions with itself.  Under those
circumstances, going with the present assumptions, the substrate need not
be anything more than a matrix that facilitates the various reactions.

Eric


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
The input is not directly transformed into output but you must initially apply 
heat of some type to coax Rossi's ECAT to put out excess heat energy.  It does 
nothing until the heat input occurs and after that  the amount of heat 
generated depends upon the internal temperature.  What controls does he have to 
make a useful system?  As far as I can determine, his only input is resistive 
heating and the output heat is directed to the coolant or radiated to some 
point.  He must be able to turn off the device in some manner and it is evident 
that cutting the drive power is the way he does it.


Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self sustaining.   
The internal temperature has always dropped toward room in his experiments.  
The famous October test of last year did not continue at the maximum power 
output for very long (less than an hour if I recall) and certainly not forever. 
 Furthermore, Rossi has stated on more occasions than I can count that his 
device will not have a COP specification of greater than 6 if it is controlled 
and useful.  Read his journal if you question this statement; it is very 
clearly posted many times to different persons.


There are other systems that behave in different manners, such as the DGT 
device, where they achieve control by effectively starving the thing of fuel.  
And I am not sure any of the electrolysis mechanisms are controlled that 
exhibit significant amounts of output power.  Could you direct me to any of 
these devices that put out heat energy that is at least 2 times the input 
energy and can be turned on and off?  If these devices only put out low quality 
heat, then COP might not be useful in describing them. 


The entire concept of controlled constant self sustaining power output is a 
fallacy.  Constant output devices typically employ negative feedback to achieve 
stability.  The open loop gain determines how closely the output matches the 
input.  Rossi type LENR devices put out additional heat energy as the 
temperature rises which is a recipe for instability.  This constitutes positive 
feedback and it comes in handy if your goal is to get plenty of output with a 
minimum of input power.  The catch is that the internally generated heat can 
supply all the drive needed once it reaches a critical level.  If that occurs 
you are on your way toward a latching point where most attempts on your part to 
lower the drive power for control are over ruled.


If a system reaches an operating point that is controlled by positive feedback 
as in Rossi's case, there is no standing still allowed.  These types of devices 
are balanced on a razors edge at the self sustaining point and the slightest 
noise will send it off in one of two directions.  The only place they will not 
remain is at the self sustaining point.  Rossi has made it quite clear that his 
devices attempt to thermally run away which is associated with the positive 
feedback operation.


So, if Rossi wants to have a useful device that is controlled he is required to 
supply modulated input power to achieve that function.   Clearly the less input 
required, the better from an efficiency point of view.   So, it makes perfect 
sense to attempt to optimize the device at the largest controlled value of COP 
that he can safely handle.  He is no fool, and he realizes that the input power 
required is not a good thing and thus would love to reduce it.  This is not as 
easy as some think.


I want to mention again that Rossi could use controlled cooling in conjunction 
with his controlled heating to gain additional control, but thus far this has 
not been seen in his public displays.


The magic word is control.  COP and control are bound together in a Rossi type 
device.


Jed, you are entitled to your opinion just like everyone else.  Some of us are 
convinced that COP in Rossi's device is important, including him.


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sat, Sep 22, 2012 11:52 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:



This is most interestingin light of the totality of past experiments in LENR 
which are “believable”going back twenty years.
 
There seems to beexcellent evidence for long-term COP of over one but less than 
two . . .




The term COP has no meaning in the context of a cold fusion experiment. 
Output power is not -- in any way -- contingent upon or dependent upon input. 
Input is not amplified or transformed in any sense. Input can easily be turned 
off and output continues, with a COP of infinity. This is true of all cold 
fusion experiments and it has been been observed by just about every researcher 
I know.


The only reason there is any input power in a cold fusion experiment is to form 
the hydride, and to keep it from de-gassing and unforming itself. In gas 
loading and other systems, no input power is needed.


The ratio 

Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
I read that carbon rods could be obtained at craft stores so I might take a 
trip to find one if my stainless is a problem.  Did someone mention that iron 
might be a catalyst in Rossi's device?  I guess I might get some for this 
experiment by default.


Originally, I was using a second nickel for the electrode attached to the power 
supply positive terminal.  The problem I encountered with this choice was that 
apparently copper oxide or nickel oxide forms very quickly in this arrangement 
which greatly increased the resistance of the system.  I had to clean off the 
green mess quite often to keep the current at a modest level.  Unfortunately, I 
did not have any carbon around to try, so I used the best alternative which was 
stainless.  I have noticed that it is tarnishing now after several hours of 
operation and, as you suggest, it might ruin the plating of the test nickel.


I bought some borax at the grocery for an electrolyte and today discovered that 
people are using the sodium carbonate that you list below to repair rust damage 
to metals.  It is not clear why one would be better than the other since both 
negative ions are non reactive.  The original discussion about this experiment 
pointed to the use of borax.  I will use whichever is agreed upon.


I had a mischievous thought of heating the hydrogen loaded nickel in some 
manner to see if that started a reaction.  I am afraid to work with hydrogen 
tanks due to fire and explosion hazard so a Rossi type device is off limits, 
but nothing would prevent me from just heating the nickel in air.  I am not 
concerned that a major explosion is possible since I would be surprised if any 
extra heat is released at all!


This set of experiments is mainly being conducted for me to learn about 
electrolysis and electroplating.   Any LENR activity would be welcome but not 
expected with my crude setup.


Dave




-Original Message-
From: Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 2:08 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck 
Sites


On Sat, Sep 22, 2012 at 10:19 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


I would be concerned about the cost of platinum.  Stainless steel might work 
since it is un reactive.




The problem of cost is an important one, since we're talking about a tabletop 
experiment.


The danger of falling back upon unreactive materials such as gold, carbon and 
stainless steel is that they are only relatively inert under chemical 
reactions.  Under proton or deuteron capture, for example, they are quite 
reactive:


- 197Au + p - 194Pt + α + 8.4 MeV
- 197Au + D - 199Hg + 11 MeV
- 12C + D - 13C + p + 2.7 MeV
- 52Cr + p - 53Mn + 6.6 MeV (chromium is an ingredient in stainless steel)


I appreciate that there is no consensus on this list that proton and deuteron 
capture are taking place, and beyond that, there is incredulity.  But people 
such as Ed Storms take the possibility seriously, and the numbers are very 
suggestive when one looks at the transmutation results in the aggregate.  So if 
it might be the case that these processes are occurring, this dimension can be 
included in a search for suitable controls as well as possibly being used for 
further investigation.  Not taking it into account could lead to frustrated 
attempts to find a blank -- and it occurs to me that this itself is an 
interesting detail.


Taking a second look at carbon, I see that it is inert under proton capture, so 
graphite might actually be a good choice or hydrogen-1 after all (but not 
hydrogen-2).  But at the moment I'm looking at data for an experiment in which 
palladium was used with hydrogen-1; along the lines I've been suggesting in 
previous posts, this would be a good combination for a control run, since 
proton capture is not energetically favorable in palladium.  This turns out to 
be too simplistic an approach, however; in the case of this experiment, the 
choice of electrolyte, Na2CO3, appears to have been important, and isotope 
shifts in the vicinity of sodium were observed, in addition to many others.  
For similar reasons, the material of the container could be important -- teflon 
(with carbon and fluorine in it), pyrex (with boron) and stainless steel, for 
example, might all be susceptible to whatever processes are taking place within 
the active material nearby.


So if proton and deuteron capture are occurring, the search for a control may 
need to take into account not just the substrate and the isotope of hydrogen, 
but the composition of the electrolyte and container as well.  Once we start 
talking about deuterium, the search for a control system that meets the present 
criteria becomes nearly impossible, because deuterium can combine in exothermic 
reactions with itself.  Under those circumstances, going with the present 
assumptions, the substrate need not be anything more than a matrix that 
facilitates the various reactions.



Re: [Vo]:Show me the beef

2012-09-23 Thread Guenter Wildgruber
I suppose that readers of this list are aware of the significant work of 
Terence McKenna, one of the most thorough thinkers the Americans ever had.

Now TMK was very aware of the distinction, Whitehead made of 'stubborn reality' 
versus belief-based sub-reality.

To some degree 'reality' is a matter of choice.
Ok?
But beware the consequences, as GWBush who claimed to be a 'reality-creator' , 
experienced.
A very costly issue if you bet on the wrong horse (imagined 'reality').
Not only for GWB, but society at large.

If anyone needs more cold water over his head, I am ready to provide it.
Presupposing a minimum of intellectual sophistication.


Guenter




 Von: ny@aol.com ny@aol.com
An: vortex-l@eskimo.com 
Gesendet: 0:13 Sonntag, 23.September 2012
Betreff: Re: [Vo]:Show me the beef
 
Mental Abnormalities?
**

Re: [Vo]:Show me the beef

Guenter Wildgruber
Sat, 22 Sep 2012 14:43:04 -0700

This sort of message  I would expect from american smokers of shit.
Thank You for displaying that to the world at large.

Guenter





Von: Puppy Dog d...@inbox.lv
An: vortex-l@eskimo.com vortex-l@eskimo.com
Gesendet: 22:26 Samstag, 22.September 2012
Betreff: [Vo]:Show me the beef


A lesson for all the naysayers, wind bags, journalist wan-a-bees, hop
heads,
dreamers and procastinators:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4VJG8-9izQfeature=player_embedded#t=156s

How about cleaning up Vortex to allow easier selection of
intellectional
discourse and experimental
attempts from the foul, odoriferous and useless manure found here
repetitiously
hundreds of times by the same posters.

Bark Bark

***


RE: [Vo]:Rossi conspiracy. Part III

Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
Sat, 14 Jul 2012 14:16:06 -0700
I don't know if Guenter Wildgruber is *his* real name, but
Mark_-ZeroPoint most certainly is not a real name. But I'll happily
apologize if it is.

Mark, here, speculates on something, along with SVJ, about Guenter's
mail, that makes some crazy assumptions.

If you hit a reply to an actual vortex-l post, what happens to the
reply depends on, not only the list settings, but also your own email
program's settings. It has little or nothing to do with the original
email. If the mail is echoed through the list, it will have a Reply-to
header supplied by the list.

If you look at the headers from his mails, they look quite like headers
from other mails.

However, how do we know that a mail is from the vortex list? If you
only rely upon the [Vo] in the header, you could be easily misled.

Some people do send mails to both the list and the individual. That
could easily be done by the user who originates the mail. A mail that
was cc'd to the individual, as well as sent to to the list, if the
individual replies to it, will behave exactly as described.

I don't see a cc in Guenter's mails to the list, but he might be
bcc'ing the private emails of some. That would produce the same effect
for those people. Again, people might do this to suppress further cc's
being sent, but to notify an individual that a mail has been sent to
the list.

Embarrassing, messages like this, assuming a nefarious reason for
something quite ordinary, don't you think?

None of this has any bearing on the cogency of the alleged Rossi
conspiracy. As with most Matters Rossi, we don't have enough
information to do more than flap the meaning-making machine, which can
churn out endless speculations. I think Guenter was just having fun. He
seems to have some level of grasp of the situation, more than can be
said for many others.

At 12:57 PM 7/14/2012, MarkI-ZeroPoint wrote:

    SVJ wrote:

     While Im at it, I think Gunter might turn out to be an agent too
- with his own personal agenda. I base this suspicion of mine on the
fact that whenever I hit the reply button from one of Gunters vortex-l
posts my replies are automatically sent to Gunters personal email
address, not Vortex. I have come to the disquieting conclusion that
this is a deliberate act of sabotage on Gunters part, perhaps to
siphon off information from entering the general public domain. You
certainly have to admit the fact that inserting ones personal email
address in lieu of vortex-l may be due to a highly suspicious agenda!
;-)

    I think youre onto something, Steven!


     In another rambling post, Guenter goes on about how adept he is
with technology and wondering whether he should teach his non-techy
friends how to use an iPad, but yet, he cant even configure his email
client to ReplyTo: the proper vortex-l address… there would only seem
to be two possibilities… 1. His computer skills are what he implies,
quite adept, and thus should know how to properly configure his email
client, but doesnt for some nefarious reason; or 2. He isnt what he
says he is, in which case, it might excuse his inability to properly
configure his email client, but then he is 

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Mint Candy
Reminder,

 
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Va3objv1cIE/SeCVwj_HVwI/AYs/FYmv70j8LbM/s400/elephant.gif

 RFG
 Complex Electronics
 AC or DC heating
 Toroidal Chamber
 Electro Magnetic Damping
 Grain of sand on beach conversion (E=MC^2)
 Hydrides
 Energy Barriers
 Phonon Lattice Oscillations
 Nano Structures
 Catalyists
 Ionization
  Where does it all end?

 My goodness, it is an Elephant!

 Your Sweetness

David Roberson said:
Sat, 22 Sep 2012 23:58:24 -0700
 The input is not directly transformed into output but you must initially apply 
heat of some type to coax Rossi's ECAT to put out excess heat energy. It does 
nothing until the heat input occurs and after that the amount of heat generated 
depends upon the internal temperature. What controls does he have to make a 
useful system? As far as I can determine, his only input is resistive heating 
and the output heat is directed to the coolant or radiated to some point. He 
must be able to turn off the device in some manner and it is evident that 
cutting the drive power is the way he does it. Rossi has never demonstrated in 
public an ECAT that is truly self sustaining. The internal temperature has 
always dropped toward room in his experiments. The famous October test of last 
year did not continue at the maximum power output for very long (less than an 
hour if I recall) and certainly not forever. Furthermore, Rossi has stated on 
more occasions than I can count that his device will not !
 have a COP specification of greater than 6 if it is controlled and useful. 
Read his journal if you question this statement; it is very clearly posted many 
times to different persons. There are other systems that behave in different 
manners, such as the DGT device, where they achieve control by effectively 
starving the thing of fuel. And I am not sure any of the electrolysis 
mechanisms are controlled that exhibit significant amounts of output power. 
Could you direct me to any of these devices that put out heat energy that is at 
least 2 times the input energy and can be turned on and off? If these devices 
only put out low quality heat, then COP might not be useful in describing them. 
The entire concept of controlled constant self sustaining power output is a 
fallacy. Constant output devices typically employ negative feedback to achieve 
stability. The open loop gain determines how closely the output matches the 
input. Rossi type LENR devices put out additional heat energy as t!
 he temperature rises which is a recipe for instability. This c!
 onstitutes positive feedback and it comes in handy if your goal is to get 
plenty of output with a minimum of input power. The catch is that the 
internally generated heat can supply all the drive needed once it reaches a 
critical level. If that occurs you are on your way toward a latching point 
where most attempts on your part to lower the drive power for control are over 
ruled. If a system reaches an operating point that is controlled by positive 
feedback as in Rossi's case, there is no standing still allowed. These types of 
devices are balanced on a razors edge at the self sustaining point and the 
slightest noise will send it off in one of two directions. The only place they 
will not remain is at the self sustaining point. Rossi has made it quite clear 
that his devices attempt to thermally run away which is associated with the 
positive feedback operation. So, if Rossi wants to have a useful device that is 
controlled he is required to supply modulated input power to achieve!
  that function. Clearly the less input required, the better from an efficiency 
point of view. So, it makes perfect sense to attempt to optimize the device at 
the largest controlled value of COP that he can safely handle. He is no fool, 
and he realizes that the input power required is not a good thing and thus 
would love to reduce it. This is not as easy as some think. I want to mention 
again that Rossi could use controlled cooling in conjunction with his 
controlled heating to gain additional control, but thus far this has not been 
seen in his public displays. The magic word is control. COP and control are 
bound together in a Rossi type device. Jed, you are entitled to your opinion 
just like everyone else. Some of us are convinced that COP in Rossi's device is 
important, including him. Dave -Original Message- From: Jed Rothwell 
jedrothw...@gmail.com To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com Sent: Sat, Sep 22, 
2012 11:52 pm Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Line!
 arity Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote: This is most interesting!
 in light of the totality of past experiments in LENR which are 
“believable”going back twenty years. There seems to beexcellent evidence for 
long-term COP of over one but less than two . . . The term COP has no meaning 
in the context of a cold fusion experiment. Output power is not -- in any way 
-- contingent upon or dependent upon input. Input is not amplified or 

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread ChemE Stewart
You forgot dark/collapsed matter

On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 7:34 AM, Mint Candy m.ca...@gmx.us wrote:

 Reminder,


 http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Va3objv1cIE/SeCVwj_HVwI/AYs/FYmv70j8LbM/s400/elephant.gif

 RFG
 Complex Electronics
 AC or DC heating
 Toroidal Chamber
 Electro Magnetic Damping
 Grain of sand on beach conversion (E=MC^2)
 Hydrides
 Energy Barriers
 Phonon Lattice Oscillations
 Nano Structures
 Catalyists
 Ionization
  Where does it all end?

 My goodness, it is an Elephant!

 Your Sweetness

  David Roberson said:
 Sat, 22 Sep 2012 23:58:24 -0700


 The input is not directly transformed into output but you must initially apply
 heat of some type to coax Rossi's ECAT to put out excess heat energy.  It does
 nothing until the heat input occurs and after that  the amount of heat
 generated depends upon the internal temperature.  What controls does he have 
 to
 make a useful system?  As far as I can determine, his only input is resistive
 heating and the output heat is directed to the coolant or radiated to some
 point.  He must be able to turn off the device in some manner and it is 
 evident
 that cutting the drive power is the way he does it.


 Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self sustaining.
 The internal temperature has always dropped toward room in his experiments.
 The famous October test of last year did not continue at the maximum power
 output for very long (less than an hour if I recall) and certainly not 
 forever.
  Furthermore, Rossi has stated on more occasions than I can count that his
 device will not have a COP specification of greater than 6 if it is controlled
 and useful.  Read his journal if you question this statement; it is very
 clearly posted many times to different persons.


 There are other systems that behave in different manners, such as the DGT
 device, where they achieve control by effectively starving the thing of fuel.
 And I am not sure any of the electrolysis mechanisms are controlled that
 exhibit significant amounts of output power.  Could you direct me to any of
 these devices that put out heat energy that is at least 2 times the input
 energy and can be turned on and off?  If these devices only put out low 
 quality
 heat, then COP might not be useful in describing them.


 The entire concept of controlled constant self sustaining power output is a
 fallacy.  Constant output devices typically employ negative feedback to 
 achieve
 stability.  The open loop gain determines how closely the output matches the
 input.  Rossi type LENR devices put out additional heat energy as the
 temperature rises which is a recipe for instability.  This constitutes 
 positive
 feedback and it comes in handy if your goal is to get plenty of output with a
 minimum of input power.  The catch is that the internally generated heat can
 supply all the drive needed once it reaches a critical level.  If that occurs
 you are on your way toward a latching point where most attempts on your part 
 to
 lower the drive power for control are over ruled.


 If a system reaches an operating point that is controlled by positive feedback
 as in Rossi's case, there is no standing still allowed.  These types of 
 devices
 are balanced on a razors edge at the self sustaining point and the slightest
 noise will send it off in one of two directions.  The only place they will not
 remain is at the self sustaining point.  Rossi has made it quite clear that 
 his
 devices attempt to thermally run away which is associated with the positive
 feedback operation.


 So, if Rossi wants to have a useful device that is controlled he is required 
 to
 supply modulated input power to achieve that function.   Clearly the less 
 input
 required, the better from an efficiency point of view.   So, it makes perfect
 sense to attempt to optimize the device at the largest controlled value of COP
 that he can safely handle.  He is no fool, and he realizes that the input 
 power
 required is not a good thing and thus would love to reduce it.  This is not as
 easy as some think.


 I want to mention again that Rossi could use controlled cooling in conjunction
 with his controlled heating to gain additional control, but thus far this has
 not been seen in his public displays.


 The magic word is control.  COP and control are bound together in a Rossi type
 device.


 Jed, you are entitled to your opinion just like everyone else.  Some of us are
 convinced that COP in Rossi's device is important, including him.


 Dave



 -Original Message-
 From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
 To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Sent: Sat, Sep 22, 2012 11:52 pm
 Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


 Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:



 This is most interestingin light of the totality of past experiments in LENR
 which are “believable”going back twenty years.

 There seems to beexcellent evidence for long-term COP of over one but less 
 than
 two . . 

Re: [Vo]:Why is MM considered a disproff of Ether?

2012-09-23 Thread Mauro Lacy

On 09/22/2012 02:57 PM, Jouni Valkonen wrote:

There are two kinds of ethers.


Better said, those are two notions of the ether, that are of historical 
value and of customary use.
When I say ether I refer to the also customary notion of 'light carrying 
medium', but in general terms, that is, without any association (yet) 
with particular models or theories for it. Because that's what we're 
trying to arrive at. To a notion of an ether that does not contradict 
accepted and verified experimental results.




First: the classical ether is extremely stiff medium where light waves 
are propagating, similarly like sound waves are propagating in a 
water. It must be hugely stiff, because the speed of light is depended 
on the stiffness and the speed of light is quite remarkable.


That version clearly was disproved, as you said.

As you can see, it's a strongly mechanical version of the ether, related 
to the behaviour of longitudinal waves propagating in an stiff medium, 
and relating velocity of propagation with the stiffness of said medium.




There is slight problem that if ether as stiff that it allows the 
speed for light to be 300 Mm/s, then how on Earth there can be 
inertial movement around the sun! And if ether does not interact with 
regular matter, then how come we can see the light that is pressure 
waves propagating through ether?


Luckily this classical ether was refuted by Einstein and his (with 
little help from Planck) invention of quantum theory that pointed out 
that actually photons are quantum particles, not waves. And as they 
are particles, no ether as medium for light waves is required.


That is debatable. 'Particles' is a human construct, closely related to 
the notions of 'thing', and 'object', which are, in turn, a result of 
our everyday experience in the world, and also, to an extent of no minor 
importance, of our mental framework when relating and interacting with 
said world. In reality, there may very well be no particles at all. And 
I suspect that is the case, that is, that the Universe is not monadic, 
in the sense that its building blocks are not essentially irreducible, 
but, much to the contrary, are just manifestations or irregularities in 
a substrate that is essentially a continuum.


Or, at least, that that may very well be the case, that is, that that 
option is not excluded /per se/. It's equally mind boggling to think in 
terms of a continuum, than to think that there's a point of 
irreducibility. What's that irreducible particle's substance? What's 
made of? What's inside it? etc.





Second: The other kind of Ether is Newton's fixed background or 
preferred frame of reference. Einstein developed this idea even 
further when he showed with general relativity that actually ether is 
not fixed, but the gravity can modify the geometry of absolute frame 
of reference.


Einstein himself called correctly his general relativity as ether 
theory as it is based on a idea of an absolute frame of reference.



In some other instances I have promoted Lorentz's theory of 
relativity. That is similar ether based kinematic theory as general 
relativity is for accelerating frame of references. That is, the 
kinematic motion in Lorentz's theory of relativity is 
always measured in respect of ether and if we choose Earth's gravity 
field as preferred frame of reference, then this 
interpretation agrees with every empirical observations so far.


Although Lorentz's theory of relativity is ether theory, it has not 
been disproved and it happily agrees with MM experiment and all the 
time dilation observations. Therefore this latter kind of ether, where 
ether or preferred frame of reference is Earth's gravity field, is not 
refuted.


Right. Better, then.

Now you should carefully reflect on what *physical* (as opposed to 
mathematical, or geometrical) properties that non-refuted Lorentzian 
ether must have, in order to accommodate both, the propagation of light 
waves, and also, their particular modes of propagation, that is, those 
that are known to be such according to Michelson  Morley type 
experiments, and which are modeled mathematically and geometrically by 
the diverse branches or variants of a number of (valid) Relativity theories.


When doing that, (which is by no means easy), you'll be gaining a 
physical interpretation of Relativity, in the line of the venerable and 
old science of Physics. That interpretation will necessarily be 
non-mechanical, that is, the used and abused analogy of propagation of 
waves in a more or less stiff medium, will not be applicable to it. As 
you may know, something can very well be physical and non-mechanical at 
the same time. Or, conversely: the fact that something is 
non-mechanical, does not prove or implies then, that it does not exist.


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
You could not be more wrong - at least if you are classifying Ni-H as cold
fusion which it isn't.

 

Input is clearly being amplified by a positive feedback modality. 

 

There is zero evidence of any self-running system - albeit lots of
unsubstantiated talk. The hallmark of nickel hydrogen, or cobalt hydrogen-
is maintenance of system parameters above the trigger threshold, so that
positive feedback can operate. This is the sine qua non.

 

I should qualify this by saying that it is possible in the future, with
clever use of thermal recirculation, and via storage of very hot fluid
(molten salt above the trigger temp), or else by minimal electric input
which is computer controlled by the drop in thermal output (on removal of
input) we can eventually raise COP enormously, but COP will always be the
major concern from the perspective of commercialization.

 

Thus far, there is no evidence of a self-running system. Celani, at one of
his demos, spoke as if he had accomplished this, but later retracted;
recently he has raised COP significantly but still requires periodic
electrical input. Do not confuse self-running with slow-cooling.

 

From: Jed Rothwell 

 

The term COP has no meaning in the context of a cold fusion experiment.
Output power is not -- in any way -- contingent upon or dependent upon
input. Input is not amplified or transformed in any sense. Input can easily
be turned off and output continues, with a COP of infinity. 

 



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

The input is not directly transformed into output but you must initially
 apply heat of some type to coax Rossi's ECAT to put out excess heat energy.


That is true, but once it heats up you can turn off the heat input.



 What controls does he have to make a useful system?


I do not know if it is useful, but it can be run without input. Any cold
fusion system can be.



 Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self
 sustaining.


Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.



   The internal temperature has always dropped toward room in his
 experiments.


That is incorrect. It starts at room temperature and rises. During the
4-hour run with no input, the temperature rose twice.


Furthermore, Rossi has stated on more occasions than I can count that his
 device will not have a COP specification of greater than 6 if it is
 controlled and useful.


I think he is incorrect.


The entire concept of controlled constant self sustaining power output is a
 fallacy.


I do not know whether it can be controlled or not but I am sure it has
happened. I doubt that external heating would be a good method of control.

Celani has greatly reduced his input power since ICCF17, with no apparent
decrease in control, so I do not think external heating is a method of
control.



 Jed, you are entitled to your opinion just like everyone else.  Some of us
 are convinced that COP in Rossi's device is important, including him.


It may be important but it is possible to run any cold fusion device
without input power. That is a matter of fact, not opinion. Many people
have done this, with Pd and Ni. Even if you distrust Rossi's claims, many
others have done this. You cannot argue with replicated experimental data.

I have not heard that systems in heat after death tend to go out of control.

- Jed


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
From: Jed Rothwell 

 

Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self
sustaining.

 

Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.

 

Wrong. His cell was connected during this time. He claimed the connection
was minimal or some such excuse - but no one ever got to test it.



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 You could not be more wrong – at least if you are classifying Ni-H as
 “cold fusion” which it isn’t.


Are you suggesting that Pd-D is fusion and Ni-H is not? Or that they both
are not fusion? I do not see how Pd-D can produce helium at the same ratio
to the heat as plasma fusion does if it is not fusion.

If you are saying they are different phenomena, I am not aware of any
experimental evidence for that. I do not know of any theory papers that say
that. As far as I know, the researchers all assume that the Pd and Ni
effects are the same, if for no other reason then for what McKubre calls
the conservation of miracles.

What makes you think they are different? Or that both are not fusion?



 There is zero evidence of any self-running system – albeit lots of
 unsubstantiated talk.


No, there are many papers from Fleischmann, McKubre, Mizuno and others
describing heat after death, which is to say self-running. This is not
unsubstantiated talk. If you think it is, you have not read the literature
carefully. Or you are ignoring replicated experimental data, which is to
say, you are engaged in a form of faith-based religion, rather than
science. The first and most fundamental rule of science is that you must
believe experimental evidence. It overrules everything else.


Thus far, there is no evidence of a self-running system. Celani, at one of
 his demos, spoke as if he had accomplished this, but later retracted . . .


No, he did not claim that. Not in discussions with me, anyway. He said he
will increase insulation and he hopes to reduce input to zero. He has
reduced input from 48 W to around 10 W. I hope that he will soon reduce it
to zero. In any case, many other Ni systems have been run with zero input
power after initial heating.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:


 Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self
 sustaining.

 ** **

 Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.

 ** **

 Wrong. His cell was connected during this time. He claimed the connection
 was “minimal” or some such excuse - but no one ever got to test it.


Other people at the demonstration confirmed there was no input power.
However, if you doubt that, and you think Rossi bamboozled these
observers, I suggest you ignore Rossi and look only at reports of heat
after death from other researchers.

People who distrust Rossi should ignore him completely, and look only at
other cold fusion research. Rossi has made important contributions in my
opinion, but you can ignore him and still learn all there is to know about
this field by looking at other researchers.

- Jed


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
In any event neither 4 hours - nor heat after death is adequate - these
are thermal excursion which are far from self-sustaining. 

 

Of course, there is no real definition for what this parameter needs to be -
but in the context of a reactor having significant thermal insulation - at
least 24 hours and probably a week would be needed to please most observers.

 

 

From: Jed Rothwell 

 

Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self
sustaining.

 

Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.

 

Wrong. His cell was connected during this time. He claimed the connection
was minimal or some such excuse - but no one ever got to test it.



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

Input is clearly being amplified by a positive feedback modality.


That is true, without doubt. Fleischmann pointed that out in 1990. He
triggered the boil-off events with an external heat pulse. It works the
same way whether the heat comes from outside or whether it is
self-generating in positive feedback as McKubre calls it.

No one disputes that heat triggers and enhances the reaction, with Pd-D and
Ni-H. But that does not mean you cannot cut off the external heating
completely, once you reach the operating temperature.

I do not see how an external heat source can be used to control the
reaction, because internal heating soon overtakes it in any case. If
positive feedback can cause an out-of-control reaction (such as an
explosion), I do not see how external heating can prevent that.

It is not clear what the control factors are, but I am sure the reaction
can be controlled. It does not always run out of control and explode, so
there must be some mechanism preventing that. It is not like putting a
flame to loose gunpowder.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 In any event neither “4 hours” – nor “heat after death” is adequate


4 hours far exceeds the limits of chemistry with this device, so it is
adequate. If there were 100 kg of potential chemical fuel and oxidizer in
the machine of course it would not be adequate. The only meaningful
criterion is whether the device can be run on chemical fuel for the
duration of the test. That is, chemical fuel actually present in the
machine.

Heat after death simply means self-sustaining operation. It is the same
thing exactly, just as cold fusion is the same as LENR. It is jargon
invented by Fleischmann. I use the expression only because that is the
search term you need to find papers in the literature with a Google search.
(Incidentally, the Google search at LENR-CANR.org is limited to papers and
HTML screens within that web site.)



 – these are thermal excursion which are far from self-sustaining.


They are self-sustaining by definition. The cooling curves show that the
device would reach room temperature in a half-hour.



 Of course, there is no real definition for what this parameter needs to be
 . . .


Yes, there is. The device has to exceed the limits of chemistry by a large
margin. This definition was first published by Fleischmann.



 – but in the context of a reactor having significant thermal insulation -
 at least 24 hours and probably a week would be needed to please most
 observers.


It would not please the skeptics, but in any case this criterion is
arbitrary and meaningless. All you have to do is show the cooling curve
with no input power and no anomalous power. With the Rossi device, anyone
can see it cools down to room temperature in 30 minutes or so. It remained
quite hot for 4 hours, assuming there were no dishonest tricks. Also, no
device without input -- chemical or anomalous input -- can heat up. The
temperature always falls monotonically.

If you suspect there were dishonest tricks, you should ignore this data. If
you think that Flesichmann, McKubre, Mizuno and everyone else who has
reported heat after death with Pd or Ni are dishonest, you should ignore
this entire field.

- Jed


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
From: Jed Rothwell 

Jones Beene wrote: You could not be more wrong - at least if
you are classifying Ni-H as cold fusion which it isn't.

Are you suggesting that Pd-D is fusion and Ni-H is not? 

Yes, that is exactly what I am suggesting. Most of us on vortex agree that
Pd-D seems to have all the characteristics of fusion (to helium) but Ni-H
has no characteristics of fusion.

And Krivit has looked into the proportionality issue (thermal gain compared
to claimed helium) and found none, but let's don't go there - we should
strive to divorce the two fields. They are fundamentally different.

there are many papers from Fleischmann, McKubre, Mizuno and
others describing heat after death, which is to say self-running

No - it is not to say self-running instead it is to say that they operate
on a completely different reaction. 

These are researchers involved with deuterium. High school kids routinely
fuse deuterium in Farnsworth Fusors. It is almost mundane. We know this
happens with deuterium only, never with hydrogen. 

We should strive to drop all association of Pd-D when we are discussing
Ni-H, as the two reactions are unlikely to be related. Hydrogen does almost
nothing unusual in pure palladium, for instance. The reaction demands a
ferromagnetic metal - either nickel or cobalt. When palladium is alloyed
with nickel, hydrogen will then become a valid fuel for thermal gain - but
NOT with pure Pd. 

That should tell you volumes about the underlying mechanism.

Jones
attachment: winmail.dat

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:


 Are you suggesting that Pd-D is fusion and Ni-H is not?

 Yes, that is exactly what I am suggesting. Most of us on vortex agree that
 Pd-D seems to have all the characteristics of fusion (to helium) but Ni-H
 has no characteristics of fusion.


Have you taken a poll? How do you know what most of us agree upon?

In any case, science is not a popularity contest. Until there is published
data showing that Ni-H does or does not produce something equivalent to the
He from Pd-D (but obviously not He), no one will have any basis to say Ni-H
is not fusion. There have been no studies of this as far as I know. No one
has looked for products. I think it might be even more difficult to find
them than it is with Pd-D.

McKubre and many others assume that Pd and Ni produce the same basic
effect, because it seems unlikely there are many different heretofore
undiscovered sources of anomalous non-chemical heat from hydrides. That is
what he jokingly calls the conservation of miracles hypothesis. I agree
with him. Granted, that is not based on theory or experimental
observations. As I said, no one has done any experiments or made any
observations. No one has looked for products yet.



 And Krivit has looked into the proportionality issue (thermal gain compared
 to claimed helium) and found none, but let's don't go there . . .


Krivit has many fine qualities but his analytic skills seem wanting to me.



 - we should strive to divorce the two fields. They are fundamentally
 different.


Until there is some experimental evidence for this I will disagree. I do
not think we should assume we know the answer to questions that we have
never asked of nature. I do not think it is a good idea to assume we know
for sure how experiments will turn out before we do the experiments. People
often do that, but it is contrary to the scientific method.



 The reaction demands a
 ferromagnetic metal - either nickel or cobalt. When palladium is alloyed
 with nickel, hydrogen will then become a valid fuel for thermal gain - but
 NOT with pure Pd.


Obviously there are differences. Pd only works with D, for example.



 That should tell you volumes about the underlying mechanism.


What does it tell you? (Serious question.)

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Eric Walker
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 12:36 AM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

I read that carbon rods could be obtained at craft stores so I might take a
 trip to find one if my stainless is a problem.  Did someone mention that
 iron might be a catalyst in Rossi's device?  I guess I might get some for
 this experiment by default.


Wikipedia says that US nickels are 75 percent copper.  If you don't want
copper increasing resistivity (and Joule heating) you might need to look
for something other than US nickels.  Pure nickel in natural abundances
will not be expected to do anything under hydrogen-1 capture, by the way,
although short-lived isotopes of it will.  Nearby isotopes, such as copper
and cobalt, can participate.  So if proton or deuteron capture are what are
happening, this suggests that Andrea Rossi really does need a catalyst, or
he needs nickel with impurities, and it gives support to the idea that
constantan would be better than pure nickel.

I had a mischievous thought of heating the hydrogen loaded nickel in some
 manner to see if that started a reaction.


I personally like this idea, although it does sound dangerous.  It's hard
to imagine what people are thinking when they take vessels of hydrogen and
some material and then pressurize them to many atmospheres and heat them to
high temperatures.  That sounds like a death wish.  From what I've seen
with transitions in carbon under deuteron capture, oxygen will evolve, so
if there are any carbon-based impurities, you will have a nice combination
of: oxygen, deuterium, heat, high pressure.

Given the possibility of the electrolyte participating in the reaction as
well as all of the challenges of electrolysis, I wonder whether gas phase
systems might do a better job at controlling some of the important
variables.  The gas phase systems eliminate questions about the electrolyte
and, in some setups, the question of input power.  As Jed has mentioned, in
some gas phase systems you can simply expose the active material to
ambient, unheated hydrogen and you'll see an effect -- these are
the zeolite experiments, I think.  I kind of like Nick Reiter's approach,
here.  He's getting around the difficulty of working with
pressurized hydrogen by using a KH slurry that releases hydrogen.  One
unknown here is what happens to the potassium, since it will transition to
argon under proton capture.  I believe he is heating his setup.

Nothing I say here should discourage you from using electrolysis or
otherwise affect how you do your experiment!  I'm part of the peanut
gallery.

Eric


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
I wrote:



 Thus far, there is no evidence of a self-running system. Celani, at one of
 his demos, spoke as if he had accomplished this, but later retracted . . .


 No, he did not claim that. Not in discussions with me, anyway. He said he
 will increase insulation and he hopes to reduce input to zero.


As you can see from the videos, Celani's English is sometimes hard to
understand. It would not surprise me if some people got the mistaken
impression this is what he claimed. However, I am sure he did not.

I talked with him and with Brian from NI. Neither of them said he has
already run the Ni wire system without input heating power. They both said
he hopes to increase the insulation, heat the system, and then turn off the
heating, to let it run for an extended period. Several days or weeks. That
is what he is doing. He has reduced the input power. As of a few weeks ago
when I last heard from him, he had not eliminated it completely, but that
is his goal.

Some people at ICCF17 criticized Celani's approach. They felt it would
better for him to build something like a flow calorimeter, which can
measure the heat with much more confidence. Then he can be sure the heat is
real even with some level of input power. I prefer Celani's approach, but I
can see these critics have a valid point of view, and their method has some
advantages.

Celani does have a precision flow calorimeter. He has used it for Ni-H
studies. But not with this particular material and this system. It would
not work. He would have to re-engineer the instrument, he says. I am not
sure why. I think the sample is too big, and it runs too hot.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
Running a device for 4 hours as it cools off is not self sustaining.  Self 
sustaining suggests that it will continue indefinitely since the energy 
required to keep the device hot and active is being generated within and  Rossi 
has not stated that this is possible with the ECAT.  As far as I recall, he 
speaks of a 50% duty cycle drive waveform at 1/3 output power level and I agree 
with him that this is required if he is to use a thermal control process.  Can 
you show me any document where he suggests that the COP is not limited to 
approximately 6?


I was discussing Rossi's ECAT in my post and not the other researchers or 
systems with regard to self sustaining operation.  Please read my post as I 
agree that some of the other electrolysis devices have been run in a semi 
continuous nature as they generate heat without drive.  Rossi seems to have the 
best shot at a product in the shortest time to market.  According to him, he 
already is selling the 1 MW system to a military customer and it does not run 
in a self sustaining mode by any reasonable definition.


Maybe it is a good time to define what the phrase self sustaining means.  My 
definition of this term is that a device that exhibits this mode will continue 
indefinitely to put out the same amount of heat without any input power 
required to drive it after initial ignition.  Perhaps you do not agree with 
this definition?  Also, we must choose a minimum time frame during which this 
constant power is generated if we are to ensure that stored heat or chemical 
heating is not the source of the energy.   A few hours is far too short of a 
period if we are serious.  And, in the case of Rossi's demonstration, the 
temperature of the device was drifting downward and not steady throughout the 
test.


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 11:14 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 



Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly selfsustaining.


 


Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.
 

Wrong. His cell wasconnected during this time. He claimed the connection was 
“minimal”or some such excuse - but no one ever got to test it.





Other people at the demonstration confirmed there was no input power. However, 
if you doubt that, and you think Rossi bamboozled these observers, I suggest 
you ignore Rossi and look only at reports of heat after death from other 
researchers.

People who distrust Rossi should ignore him completely, and look only at other 
cold fusion research. Rossi has made important contributions in my opinion, but 
you can ignore him and still learn all there is to know about this field by 
looking at other researchers.

- Jed


 


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
 

From: Jed Rothwell 

 

*  That should tell you volumes about the underlying mechanism.

 

What does it tell you? (Serious question.)

 

 

It tells me that Ni-H (as opposed to Pd-D)

 

1)Is a QM reaction involving ferromagnetic host material in
nano-geometry

2)Magnons are the energy transfer mechanism
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnon)

3)QCD is the field that explains how magnons within the proton are
produced during color change

4)QCD explains why this does not happen with deuterons, or with any
other nucleus except the proton

5)The ultimate source of energy is a reduction in proton average mass
following the helium-2 reversible reaction, which instigates the color
change - so this is quasi-nuclear and not chemical

6)The gain is related to the strong-force, and only the strong force
(via QCD) and there is almost no weak-force contribution (in stark contrast
to W-L theory)

7)This theory is falsifiable, unlike others.

 



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Running a device for 4 hours as it cools off is not self sustaining.


This is wrong for two reasons:

1. It did not cool off. It got hotter, then cooler, than hotter again,
before finally cooling. This proves there was some source of energy in the
cell. That is fundamental to the laws of thermodynamics.

2. The cooling curves show that it cools to room temperature in about a
half hour.

Those are the facts of the matter. You need to deal with them. Do not say
it cools off when in fact it got hotter. If you think Rossi is dishonest
and these results are fake, that would be a valid reason for you to ignore
them, but you should not make assertions that are contrary to the laws of
thermodynamics. That is not a valid scientific argument. Unless you assert
those laws are incorrect.



  Self sustaining suggests that it will continue indefinitely . . .


That is incorrect. Mizuno's device self-sustained for several days but
eventually the reaction quenched itself. Obviously, there is enough fuel in
the system to let it run for centuries or thousands of years, but some
mechanism within it prevents that. Still, it is self-sustaining.



 Can you show me any document where he suggests that the COP is not limited
 to approximately 6?


Rossi's assertions are not the issue here. I can show you lots of documents
showing that cold fusion cells run without input power, both Pd and Ni
cells. Also, the engineering definition of COP has nothing to do with
external heating power, and it cannot be altered by improving insulation,
as Celani has done recently, and as Mizuno did in his Ni studies.



 Maybe it is a good time to define what the phrase *self sustaining*means.  My 
 definition of this term is that a device that exhibits this mode
 will continue indefinitely to put out the same amount of heat without any
 input power required to drive it after initial ignition.  Perhaps you do
 not agree with this definition?


Indefinitely should not be part of it, since these systems tend to stop
for unknown reasons, as Mizuno's did. I would stick to Fleischmann's
definition, which is that the system runs far longer than it would with any
chemical source of fuel.

In Rossi's case, it not only ran without input, it got hotter, which proves
there was some source of input.



  Also, we must choose a minimum time frame during which this constant
 power is generated if we are to ensure that stored heat or chemical heating
 is not the source of the energy.


That's easy. Just use rocket fuel as your baseline. In a closed cell the
fuel has to to include the oxygen, as rocket fuel does. You also have to
have a delivery system, or the cell will explode. Needless to say, there is
no delivery system or rocket fuel or any other fuel in Rossi's device.



   A few hours is far too short of a period if we are serious.


No it isn't too short. Not if you confirm there is no rocket fuel or any
other chemical fuel in the cell, in amounts large enough to be seen with
the naked eye. A mass of chemical fuel large enough to produce this much
heat is macroscopic. You can easily see it.



  And, in the case of Rossi's demonstration, the temperature of the device
 was drifting downward and not steady throughout the test.


No, it was increasing. The increase is readily apparent. The only way it
could be false is if the demonstration was fake.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson

Jed says:


I do not see how an external heat source can be used to control the reaction, 
because internal heating soon overtakes it in any case. If positive feedback 
can cause an out-of-control reaction (such as an explosion), I do not see how 
external heating can prevent that.


One can establish control of a positive feedback ECAT system by taking away 
enough of the internal device heat so it no longer possess the temperature 
required to regenerate the self sustaining energy.  The total heat power being 
released within the device is the sum of the drive power and the internally 
generated power.   Remove the drive and you are left with the internal source.  
It is important that the internal source is limited by design to a level that 
does not exceed the self sustaining point.  This can be achieved by limiting 
the internal heating power to less than approximately 2 times the drive power. 
Incidentally, the closer you allow the internally generated heat to become to 
the critical self sustaining level, the higher the COP since the thermal time 
constants approach infinity at that exact level.  This is important because the 
refresh input drive can be spaced further apart as the time constant increases. 
 Less often drive results in increased COP.  My simulation demonstrates this 
behavior.


Dave





 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


 One can establish control of a positive feedback ECAT system by taking
 away enough of the internal device heat so it no longer possess the
 temperature required to regenerate the self sustaining energy.


Yes, I see that. But it seems like a dicey way to control the reaction. I
do not think it would work quickly enough with an actual large-scale energy
source for something like a locomotive engine.

There must be other factors at work that inhibit or enhance the reaction.
If that were not the case, Rossi's cell running in heat after death would
not have self-heated, nor would Mizuno's and the others that were cooled at
a constant rate.

In the early days of steam engines and later Diesel engines there were
various control mechanisms applied that did not work well enough. They were
too slow (as I suspect this one is), or too crude (such as regulating the
fuel supply without fine control), or because other unknown control
mechanism were at work. This resulted in run-away engines and boiler
explosions. If Rossi is trying to control the thing using thermal methods
alone, my hunch is that will not work, for reasons similar to the problems
with early heat engines.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Ed Storms remarked that his theory can explain both Pd and Ni reactions. I
believe other theories attempt to explain both as manifestations of the
same fundamental reaction.

Jones Beene has now listed some reasons to doubt this. He believes there
are multiple unrelated miracles. That is a perfectly valid point of view,
but it would be surprising.

Beene believes this is a a reduction in proton average mass following the
helium-2 reversible reaction . . . Since the proton is in the nucleus,
that would make this a nuclear reaction. I can't imagine how it would be
reversible, which I suppose means it can sometime be endothermic. I have
not seen any experimental evidence for massive endothermic reactions with
Ni or Pd that far exceed the limits of endothermic chemical reactions.

Beene says this is falsifiable. That is fine, but until it is tested and
confirmed or falsified it remains in limbo, like any other theory. Ed's
theory is also falsifiable, as are others.

I know little about theory, and I care less, so I have nothing more to add
to this particular discussion.

I do know that Rossi's cell had no power going into it and it was not
cooling, so anyone who says it was is making false assertions. You are
confusing the issue. Please stop doing that. It is perfectly okay to say
you don't believe Rossi's data. We all agree that the instruments were
inadequate and Rossi's credibility is not all it should be. However, if you
grant that the data is real, then please stop saying it shows a cell that
is cooling down monotonically. Anyone glancing at the graphs can see that
is wrong.

- Jed


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
 

 

From: Jed Rothwell 

 

This is wrong for two reasons:

 

1.  It did not cool off. It got hotter, then cooler, than hotter again,
before finally cooling. This proves there was some source of energy in the
cell. That is fundamental to the laws of thermodynamics.

 

No! this does not prove anything of the kind - except for the superficially
of your understanding of thermodynamic principles. 

 

You do not understand Preparata, or superradiance. You have forgotten the
lesson of recalescence which we have talked about here before. You do not
understand that phase-change alone can provide heat after death.

 

The simple proof the incorrectness of your logic is found in a mundane
phenomenon the singing bowl and it can be seen in some tuning forks. The
bowl is struck and begins to vibrate. In normal bells or tuning forks, the
frequency tails off, and is always decreasing. However, with specialty
metals - the vibration is not a linear decrease, and the frequency can
actually increase, before finally decreasing. 

 

This is increase in frequency is directly applicable to heating-gain after
power shut-off. The same thing happens in recalescence and other forms of
phase change.

 

Preparata and Dicke explained this as super-radiance. It does not violate
the laws of thermodynamics.

 

Jones



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Alain Sepeda
I'll just add that Defkalion claims that after a pulse of few dozens of
joules the reactor have a heat after death during few dozens of minutes,
of few hundreds of joules.

It works for few days, but electrodes wears out... anyway I imagine that we
can eliminate chemical hypothesis after few cycles...

about positive feedback it was clear since long. Iv'e erad in a CEA
Grenoble report that they tried boiling mills cell to have more heat
produced.

note that it is not heat but temperature that help reaction, thus if you
control the thermal insulation so that temperature get high enough for the
excess heat, it get self sustaining...

to reach self-sustain then overheating, just put a reactor in a perfectly
insulated container... it will get warmer, produce more heat, get warmer,
and melt...
insulate less nicely but not too much and it will get self sustain, or slow
decrease if heat.

the control is hard to guess...
if temperature increase, heat flow increase with the cooling fluid, and can
stabilize or not the reaction.
the reactor can also change of positive feedback with time...
if it increase, the reactor overheat and meltdown.
if it decrease, it extinguish.

note also that there might exist many phenomenons with different
time-constant, different feedback, and you should put external feed back
loops of different contant time, and fifferent gains, to stabilize it as
you want...

I suspect that defkalion cause shortterm supercriticality, then longterm
subcriticality...

Rossi hotcat setup seems rough, with the two pairsof similar gauge (are
they 2 heaters, heater +  thermocouple, else?..)  much more rough
maybe is ther an intrinsic mechanism to stabilize the reactor, like there
is on nuclear reactors with the power/temp resonance, and with the delayed
neutrons...

maybe is this a kind of catalyst (in fact a stabilizer)...

what is sure is that self-sustain is not a problem of power but of control.
it is much harder than triggering...

2012/9/23 Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com

 Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

  In any event neither “4 hours” – nor “heat after death” is adequate


 4 hours far exceeds the limits of chemistry with this device, so it is
 adequate. If there were 100 kg of potential chemical fuel and oxidizer in
 the machine of course it would not be adequate. The only meaningful
 criterion is whether the device can be run on chemical fuel for the
 duration of the test. That is, chemical fuel actually present in the
 machine.

 Heat after death simply means self-sustaining operation. It is the same
 thing exactly, just as cold fusion is the same as LENR. It is jargon
 invented by Fleischmann. I use the expression only because that is the
 search term you need to find papers in the literature with a Google search.
 (Incidentally, the Google search at LENR-CANR.org is limited to papers and
 HTML screens within that web site.)





Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

You do not understand that phase-change alone can provide “heat after
 death”.


A phase change -- from meaning from gas to liquid, or liquid to solid --
can change the rate of cooling but it cannot make it anything other than a
monotonic decrease as far as I know.

Perhaps you should cite a textbook on this. We are talking about kilowatt
levels of heat lasting for hours.

In the electrochemical systems, changes in the lattice loading phase change
the gas release rate and can make a recombination increase or decrease.
This would increase the heat. You can see this happen quite clearly with
the naked eye. The number of bubbles on a Pd the cathode surface
dramatically increases as one phase ends and another begins. This is a fuel
delivery system.

Rossi's cell is not electrochemical, obviously. I do not think there is any
mechanism that would free up hydrogen gas, and in any case the hydrogen is
not burning (recombing) because it is not escaping from the cell
(degassing) and because there is no oxygen. The pressure is the same at the
end as at the beginning.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Alain Sepeda alain.sep...@gmail.com wrote:


 what is sure is that self-sustain is not a problem of power but of control.
 it is much harder than triggering...


Quite right. It is much harder, and much more dangerous.

The two are related but not the same.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread John Page

I think replicators should read carefully this section of what chuck says:
 Just so know how machined the coins into electrodes; I just used a hacksaw 
and made two cuts into the coin to make a tab, and then bent it up with needle 
nose pliers. The tab was about 1/8 thick and stood about 1/2 tall. The end 
result was a little C-shaped electrode.

I would think that cutting and bending might create numerous NAE sites.  This 
step may be very important.

- Original Message -
From: David Roberson lt;dlrober...@aol.comgt;
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, 23 Sep 2012 07:36:13 - (UTC)
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck 
Sites
I read that carbon rods could be obtained at craft stores so I might take a 
trip to find one if my stainless is a problem. Did someone mention that iron 
might be a catalyst in Rossi's device? I guess I might get some for this 
experiment by default.
Originally, I was using a second nickel for the electrode attached to the power 
supply positive terminal. The problem I encountered with this choice was that 
apparently copper oxide or nickel oxide forms very quickly in this arrangement 
which greatly increased the resistance of the system. I had to clean off the 
green mess quite often to keep the current at a modest level. Unfortunately, I 
did not have any carbon around to try, so I used the best alternative which was 
stainless. I have noticed that it is tarnishing now after several hours of 
operation and, as you suggest, it might ruin the plating of the test nickel.
I bought some borax at the grocery for an electrolyte and today discovered that 
people are using the sodium carbonate that you list below to repair rust damage 
to metals. It is not clear why one would be better than the other since both 
negative ions are non reactive. The original discussion about this experiment 
pointed to the use of borax. I will use whichever is agreed upon.
I had a mischievous thought of heating the hydrogen loaded nickel in some 
manner to see if that started a reaction. I am afraid to work with hydrogen 
tanks due to fire and explosion hazard so a Rossi type device is off limits, 
but nothing would prevent me from just heating the nickel in air. I am not 
concerned that a major explosion is possible since I would be surprised if any 
extra heat is released at all!
This set of experiments is mainly being conducted for me to learn about 
electrolysis and electroplating. Any LENR activity would be welcome but not 
expected with my crude setup.
Dave
-Original Message-
From: Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 2:08 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck 
Sites
On Sat, Sep 22, 2012 at 10:19 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:
I would be concerned about the cost of platinum. Stainless steel might work 
since it is un reactive.
The problem of cost is an important one, since we're talking about a tabletop 
experiment.
The danger of falling back upon unreactive materials such as gold, carbon and 
stainless steel is that they are only relatively inert under chemical 
reactions. Under proton or deuteron capture, for example, they are quite 
reactive:
- 197Au + p - 194Pt + α + 8.4 MeV
- 197Au + D - 199Hg + 11 MeV
- 12C + D - 13C + p + 2.7 MeV
- 52Cr + p - 53Mn + 6.6 MeV (chromium is an ingredient in stainless steel)
I appreciate that there is no consensus on this list that proton and deuteron 
capture are taking place, and beyond that, there is incredulity. But people 
such as Ed Storms take the possibility seriously, and the numbers are very 
suggestive when one looks at the transmutation results in the aggregate. So if 
it might be the case that these processes are occurring, this dimension can be 
included in a search for suitable controls as well as possibly being used for 
further investigation. Not taking it into account could lead to frustrated 
attempts to find a blank -- and it occurs to me that this itself is an 
interesting detail.
Taking a second look at carbon, I see that it is inert under proton capture, so 
graphite might actually be a good choice or hydrogen-1 after all (but not 
hydrogen-2). But at the moment I'm looking at data for an experiment in which 
palladium was used with hydrogen-1; along the lines I've been suggesting in 
previous posts, this would be a good combination for a control run, since 
proton capture is not energetically favorable in palladium. This turns out to 
be too simplistic an approach, however; in the case of this experiment, the 
choice of electrolyte, Na2CO3, appears to have been important, and isotope 
shifts in the vicinity of sodium were observed, in addition to many others. For 
similar reasons, the material of the container could be important -- teflon 
(with carbon and fluorine in it), pyrex (with boron) and stainless steel, for 
example, might all be susceptible to whatever processes are 

RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene

From: Jed Rothwell 

A phase change -- from meaning from gas to liquid, or liquid
to solid -- can change the rate of cooling but it cannot make it anything
other than a monotonic decrease as far as I know.

Since you do not know - then why comment at all? When you persist in such
continuing levels of disinformation, it does not inspire confidence in your
other pronouncements, many of which are in areas where you do have
expertise. Not in thermodynamics - apparently. 

Recalescence can be a deadly phenomenon in some situations. It is a sudden
burst of heat during cooling. In fact, recalescence is the prototypical
version of heat after death. The death toll in steel mills - due to
recalescence - is likely to be in the thousands, over the centuries,
including an in-law. 

The surge of energy can be massive. It hard to understand how anyone in LENR
manages to remain completely ignorant of the latent energy of
phase-transitions in metals, since they can be at the heart of the causative
phenomena. The trigger temperature of Ni-H is just such a transitions,
which does not involve gas, solid or liquid phases.  

Ref: The American Heritage(r) Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth
Edition. 2000. Recalescence: 

A sudden glowing in a cooling metal caused by liberation of the latent heat
of transformation. 

The energy surge is in the range of chemical, but in a counter-intuitively
way, this energy is instigated by cooling. The short time frame for dumping
large amount of latent heat can make the energy transfer appear to be
greater than it is. 

In the context of heat after death with deuterium cells - a sudden thermal
surge in the electrodes, due to recalescence can in fact be the cause of the
recurrence of the same nuclear reactions which were effectively quenched -
when the electrical power was cut.  Thus a persistence of heat continues for
an extended period due to both phase transitions and induced nuclear
reactions. 

As with normal recalescence, and in a counter-intuitively way, this energy
release is instigated by cooling. It is not coincidental that Celani
recently reports the same endothermic periods which Ahern reported last
year. 

Jones

BTW - it turns out that a few housewives are familiar with a minimal version
of recalescence. If a cook removes a hot cast iron skillet from the stove
with a dish-cloth over the hot handle, and places the hot skillet
immediately under the tap, so that it is rapidly water-cooled, there can be
a sudden surge of heat due to recalescence - which makes the handle much
hotter than before... you may not have realized she was capable of that
level of profanity.

FWIW - here are a baker's dozen of phase transitions, not involving the
simple solid, liquid, and gaseous phases (from Wiki) some of which are quite
energetic

1)  Eutectic transformation,
2)  Peritectic transformation, 
3)  Spinodal decomposition   
4)  Transition to a mesophase between solid and liquid
5)  The transition between the ferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases, at
the Curie point.
6)  The transition between ordered, commensurate or incommensurate,
magnetic structures
7)  The Martensitic transformation in carbon steel
8)  Austenite transformation of iron.
9)  Other order-disorder transitions - such as in alpha-titanium
aluminides.
10) The emergence of superconductivity
11) The transition between molecular structures (polymorphs, allotropes)

12) Quantum condensation - Bose-Einstein Condensation 
13) The breaking of symmetries in the laws of physics during the early
history of the universe as its temperature cooled.

attachment: winmail.dat

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
A great deal depends upon exactly how the reaction behaves when the internal 
temperature of the core is changed.  Rossi can very rapidly cut off the power 
to the heating element so slow response is not important in that operation.  
After that point in time we are left with the effects of internally generated 
power which is not sufficient to keep the temperature at its level just prior 
to the cut off.  There has been no evidence to support the notion that the 
internal heating increases once the electrical heater is shut down, so it makes 
sense to assume that the core temperature will begin to go down instead of up.  
The positive feedback in effect will next force the core temperature downward 
at an ever faster rate as the device becomes further away from the critical 
self sustaining region.


Rossi most likely allows the internal heating to approach the critical region 
since that is what allows him to achieve a good COP.  The thermal time constant 
becomes infinite at the critical self sustaining level in which case he could 
theoretically wait a very long time to generate the refresh heating.   My 
simulation suggests that keeping the temperature maximum to about 90% of the 
critical level results in his specified COP.


Of course Rossi has to supply refresh pulses of heating when the core 
temperature reaches the proper lower limit.  This action allows the positive 
feedback to force the temperature upward for another major heating event.


This is an early version of Rossi's design and he may face problems that are 
difficult to handle, but it is not possible to compare this device to a steam 
engine unless we are comparing apples to oranges.


There is no issue about other factors needing to be present to get heat after 
death in Rossi's device.  I am confident that LENR heat is being generated for 
most, if not all, of the time that the core is at an elevated temperature.   A 
non LENR active device would merely release stored heat when the drive power is 
eliminated.  In this case, both LENR as well as stored heat will exit the core 
during the cool down phase.  The total heat released could be many times that 
of an inactive core.


I hope to address the temperature rise alluded to in a following post.  


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 12:53 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

 
One can establish control of a positive feedback ECAT system by taking away 
enough of the internal device heat so it no longer possess the temperature 
required to regenerate the self sustaining energy.


Yes, I see that. But it seems like a dicey way to control the reaction. I do 
not think it would work quickly enough with an actual large-scale energy source 
for something like a locomotive engine.



There must be other factors at work that inhibit or enhance the reaction. If 
that were not the case, Rossi's cell running in heat after death would not have 
self-heated, nor would Mizuno's and the others that were cooled at a constant 
rate.


In the early days of steam engines and later Diesel engines there were various 
control mechanisms applied that did not work well enough. They were too slow 
(as I suspect this one is), or too crude (such as regulating the fuel supply 
without fine control), or because other unknown control mechanism were at work. 
This resulted in run-away engines and boiler explosions. If Rossi is trying to 
control the thing using thermal methods alone, my hunch is that will not work, 
for reasons similar to the problems with early heat engines.


- Jed


 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Eric Walker
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 12:52 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

There has been no evidence to support the notion that the internal heating
 increases once the electrical heater is shut down, so it makes sense to
 assume that the core temperature will begin to go down instead of up.


The evidence we have for Rossi's device is sketchy.  But in the LENR
experiments, it is not uncommon to read about a reaction that basically
carries on autonomously, with intermittent temperature excursions and dips,
until an unknown factor quenches the process at some time well after power
has been switched off.

Eric


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:


 Recalescence can be a deadly phenomenon in some situations. It is a
 sudden
 burst of heat during cooling. In fact, recalescence is the prototypical
 version of heat after death. The death toll in steel mills . . .


Ah, I see. Thank you for explaining this.

It would appear these heat releases associated with phase changes are very
rapid, one time surge of heat. The heat after death reported by
Fleischmann, Rossi and others lasted for a long time. The heat was steady
for hours or days. I do not think the phase change heat release you
describe can account for these events.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
We are discussing an interesting group of concepts here and I have counter 
discussions for each one here.  I may break it into several different posts to 
make each of a reasonable length.



Rossi has never demonstrated in public an ECAT that is truly self sustaining.


Yes, he did. He ran for 4 hours with no input.


Here our definitions vary.  There is an operation level where the device will 
internally generate all of the heat exiting the core and keep the core at a 
constant temperature for a long period of time.  This is theoretical since it 
would be virtually impossible to actually hold the device at this output level. 
 If it were possible then heat would be generated for a very long time and 4 
hours would be insignificant in comparison.  Forget the fact that there is no 
chemical that can make more energy since that is not what we are doing.  The 
definition needs to be based upon a physics model.


There is one particular case where the output can become saturated at a high 
level that will continue to operate until melting resets the process.  Rossi 
has mentioned this on several occasions.  I do not like to think of this as a 
self sustaining point since it would take a major cooling event to stop the 
reaction at will.  And I suspect that the device would become useless after 
this behavior so it is best to avoid it.



What controls does he have to make a useful system?


I do not know if it is useful, but it can be run without input. Any cold 
fusion system can be.


This statement is too broad.  Any system of any kind can run without input.  It 
depends upon the definition of run.  I wanted an input from you that would 
reveal how Rossi controls his device if it is not modulation of the input power.



Furthermore, Rossi has stated on more occasions than I can count that his 
device will not have a COP specification of greater than 6 if it is controlled 
and useful.


I think he is incorrect.


He has done a great deal of testing and I have a tendency to think he 
understands what he is measuring.



Jed, you are entitled to your opinion just like everyone else.  Some of us are 
convinced that COP in Rossi's device is important, including him.


It may be important but it is possible to run any cold fusion device without 
input power. That is a matter of fact, not opinion. Many people have done 
this, with Pd and Ni. Even if you distrust Rossi's claims, many others have 
done this. You cannot argue with replicated experimental data.


I have not heard that systems in heat after death tend to go out of control.


Take a look at the lab explosions that are on your site.  I hope they were not 
intentional!  The recent experiment by Celani appears to demonstrate what 
happens when a system of this nature is not under control.  The positive 
feedback takes over on each of the power excursions and only ceases when some 
limit is reached.  I am guessing that it is melting of a small region of the 
active wire.


Dave 





 


RE: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jones Beene
 

From: Jed Rothwell 

 

Recalescence can be a deadly phenomenon in some situations. It is a sudden
burst of heat during cooling. In fact, recalescence is the prototypical
version of heat after death. The death toll in steel mills . . .

 

Ah, I see. Thank you for explaining this.

 

It would appear these heat releases associated with phase changes are very
rapid, one time surge of heat. The heat after death reported by Fleischmann,
Rossi and others lasted for a long time. The heat was steady for hours or
days. I do not think the phase change heat release you describe can account
for these events.

 

 

Recalescence may not be related to this phenomenon. I would love to see the
best available chart of heat-after-death, showing the thermal curve for a
substantial time frame after electrical power has been cut. Do you know of
one example in the Library, which is most illustrative of the phenomenon?

 

Yes, recalescence relates to far from equilibrium conditions, and cannot
by itself account for gain over hours, or net gain. It is fully
conservative, unless it stimulates a secondary reaction. However, what I was
intending to convey (and doing a poor job of it) is that recalescence could
be more than the driving force for a one-time burst of heat, insofar as that
transition itself then stimulates further nuclear reactions in loaded Pd
(when no electrical power is present). 

 

There could be a string of peaks and valleys in temperature, where the phase
structure of the electrodes would revert to a lower entropy, following a
bunching of fusion reactions, and then the process would repeat - in see-saw
fashion for an extended time period. This would be obvious form a thermal
chart. 

 

If such a chart of heat-after-death exists - and it were to show some kind
of see-saw or up-and-down shape, as opposed to a flat continuity of
temperature, then that would be consistent with the modality which I'm
trying to describe. 

 

If not, and the thermal curve is nearly flat over time, then
phase-transitions do not play a meaningful role.

 



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Eric Walker
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 1:35 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Take a look at the lab explosions that are on your site.  I hope they were
 not intentional!  The recent experiment by Celani appears to demonstrate
 what happens when a system of this nature is not under control.  The
 positive feedback takes over on each of the power excursions and only
 ceases when some limit is reached.  I am guessing that it is melting of a
 small region of the active wire.


The explosions may be due to sudden power excursions, but I wonder instead
whether they are due to the evolution of oxygen and nitrogen, which then
explosively combine with hydrogen.

Eric


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
I suspect that I did not get across what I had in mind in that paragraph.  I 
was assuming that we were operating below the critical self sustaining level 
per my definition.  In that case the net power being delivered to the core 
after the drive is removed is not sufficient to keep the device at the present 
temperature.  This results in sustained cooling.  Also, I am directing all of 
these effects to the operation of Rossi ECAT and not to LENR in general.


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 4:00 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 12:52 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


There has been no evidence to support the notion that the internal heating 
increases once the electrical heater is shut down, so it makes sense to assume 
that the core temperature will begin to go down instead of up.


The evidence we have for Rossi's device is sketchy.  But in the LENR 
experiments, it is not uncommon to read about a reaction that basically carries 
on autonomously, with intermittent temperature excursions and dips, until an 
unknown factor quenches the process at some time well after power has been 
switched off.


Eric
 


 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


 Take a look at the lab explosions that are on your site.  I hope they were
 not intentional!


They were not intentional, but the cells were not in heat after death as
far as I know. I am sure that Mizuno, Biberian and the Chinese cells that
exploded were undergoing electrolysis. I expect FP's cube was, as well.

I do not know of any evidence that heat after death is related to cells
going out of control and exploding.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com wrote:

The explosions may be due to sudden power excursions, but I wonder instead
 whether they are due to the evolution of oxygen and nitrogen, which then
 explosively combine with hydrogen.


The energy release far exceeds the amount of energy available in free
hydrogen and oxygen. Biberian looked at the energy balance, estimated the
energy release and reached this conclusion. In Mizuno's cell, the effluent
gas was vented so there was no free hydrogen and oxygen. It was vented
through the hose you see in the photo. The hose was not blocked, twisted or
otherwise obstructed.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
Do you recall an event mentioned by FP where the device burned it way through 
a table or floor? The amount of heat released would most likely be more than 
expected by a chemical reaction.  I suspect that none of us are aware of the 
dangers that might lurk in some of these rough experiments.


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 4:47 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

 


Take a look at the lab explosions that are on your site.  I hope they were not 
intentional!




They were not intentional, but the cells were not in heat after death as far as 
I know. I am sure that Mizuno, Biberian and the Chinese cells that exploded 
were undergoing electrolysis. I expect FP's cube was, as well.


I do not know of any evidence that heat after death is related to cells going 
out of control and exploding.


- Jed



 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Do you recall an event mentioned by FP where the device burned it way
 through a table or floor?


That as the cube I referred to. I listed it in my book. There are no
photos or other physical evidence, I am sorry to say. As far as I know,
electrolysis was running when this occurred.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Alan Fletcher
 From: John Page johnp...@comcast.net
 Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2012 11:41:11 AM

 I would think that cutting and bending might create numerous NAE
 sites. This step may be very important.

I always point out that the initial replicators should heed the alchemists, and 
follow the instructions exactly, regardless of how stupid they think they are, 
or how the experiment could be improved.

The eye of newt may contain key trace elements.



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Alan Fletcher
 From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
 Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2012 8:53:26 AM

 Obviously there are differences. Pd only works with D, for example.

U   Godes..McKubre ICCF17 : 
http://newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2012/ICCF17/ICCF-17-Godes-Controlled-Electron-Capture-Paper.pdf

Sure seem to be talking about Pd-H and Ni-H

(sorry for the link .. it's in the wired article)



[Vo]:Challenge Candidates for Office on Clean Energy Policy

2012-09-23 Thread Ruby


I give Peace and Freedom Party Candidate Roseanne Barr stickers and a 
t-shirt to start research on cold fusion.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0t2UELpLVkAfeature=plcp


--
Ruby Carat


Skype ruby-carat
www.coldfusionnow.org http://www.coldfusionnow.org


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Alan Fletcher
Nickel Coin LENR Experiment
http://www.e-catworld.com/2012/09/nickel-coin-lenr-experiment/

Mostly a quote and summary of vortex. 



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
I want to discuss the temperature readings from Rossi's October demonstration.  
I think calling that experiment controversial is an understatement.


First of all, we are only given the temperature at the output of the device 
which as far as I know approximates the region above the internal water bath.  
Rossi does not give any information or measurement data about the core of his 
device so we have no idea what it is doing.  He further complicates the 
measurements by placing some type of pressure release valve at the output after 
the bath.  I consider this a parlor trick.  Mats tried to blow air through the 
passage and found it obstructed, again pointing to a restriction.


I wrote an interpretation of the data which is on their web site within which I 
found an excellent reason for the strange temperature behavior: 


Initially the core is hot when the input power is cut off to the ECAT.  The 
measured  ECAT temperature begins to fall slowly as we all expect until it 
reaches a flat region and then heads upward a few degrees until Rossi shuts 
down the system as it begins to fall again.  Many folks seem to think that this 
means that the core has become hotter, but this is most likely not true.  The 
volume above the water bath has become hotter after the dip, but I found a way 
to explain why this rise does not demonstrate extra core temperature rise.


After the drive waveform has expired and the core reaches its maximum 
temperature, the ECAT  generates a large amount of power which outruns the 
water pump as water within the bath is turned into steam.   The extra 
vaporization shows up as elevated temperature and causes the water level within 
the bath to fall.  The core temperature continues to drop until the pump can 
begin replacing water within the bath  increasing the total volume of water 
held.  We reach a flat region when the temperature has dropped sufficiently to 
reduce the violent boiling.  Now the output temperature reads flat for some 
amount of time until the water bath fills completely thereby obstructing the 
output port.  This obstruction forces the internal pressure and associated 
boiling temperature to rise within the bath. 


We see the rise in output temperature and equate it to a rise in core 
temperature.  This is a conclusion that we reach assuming that there is nothing 
unusual about the setup, but it is not correct.


This scenario explains all of the behavior witnessed during the October test 
and I believe that it is correct.  So I conclude that there is no evidence of 
any unusual rise in the core temperature that suggests anything of a strange 
LENR nature.  I am not saying that Rossi's device did not generate excess heat 
since I am convinced that it did, but only that the amount of heat energy was 
much less than I initially believed.



  The internal temperature has always dropped toward room in his experiments.


That is incorrect. It starts at room temperature and rises. During the 4-hour 
run with no input, the temperature rose twice.




So Jed, I still believe that the temperature of the core was falling 
continuously during the Rossi demonstration and the rise you mention is an 
illusion similar to a magic trick.  I see no reason to be concerned about the 
initial rise during this discussion.


Dave




Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
I am not sure I would call the demonstration fake just because a trick is used 
to enhance the apparent performance.  The main observation I received from the 
show was that Rossi's device appears to generate significant excess energy as a 
result of LENR.  That is where the meat is.


I have another post pending where I explain the temperature behavior of the 
Rossi core.  The data supplied by Rossi does not in any way prove that the core 
does anything but exponentially drop in temperature.


I will deal with the facts when they are honest, but refuse to accept 
deception.  Maybe you should ask why Rossi denied that he had a pressure 
dropping device hidden within the output port during that demonstration even 
after it was pointed out. 


The laws of thermodynamics are not violated if the core cools down 
monotonically and a simple trick modifies the behavior elsewhere within the 
device.  You should give serious consideration to my theory of what transpired 
in October.



Dave



-Original Message-
From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 12:27 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity


David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


Running a device for 4 hours as it cools off is not self sustaining.


This is wrong for two reasons:


1. It did not cool off. It got hotter, then cooler, than hotter again, before 
finally cooling. This proves there was some source of energy in the cell. That 
is fundamental to the laws of thermodynamics.


2. The cooling curves show that it cools to room temperature in about a half 
hour.


Those are the facts of the matter. You need to deal with them. Do not say it 
cools off when in fact it got hotter. If you think Rossi is dishonest and 
these results are fake, that would be a valid reason for you to ignore them, 
but you should not make assertions that are contrary to the laws of 
thermodynamics. That is not a valid scientific argument. Unless you assert 
those laws are incorrect.


 
  Self sustaining suggests that it will continue indefinitely . . .


That is incorrect. Mizuno's device self-sustained for several days but 
eventually the reaction quenched itself. Obviously, there is enough fuel in the 
system to let it run for centuries or thousands of years, but some mechanism 
within it prevents that. Still, it is self-sustaining.


 
Can you show me any document where he suggests that the COP is not limited to 
approximately 6?


Rossi's assertions are not the issue here. I can show you lots of documents 
showing that cold fusion cells run without input power, both Pd and Ni cells. 
Also, the engineering definition of COP has nothing to do with external heating 
power, and it cannot be altered by improving insulation, as Celani has done 
recently, and as Mizuno did in his Ni studies.


 

Maybe it is a good time to define what the phrase self sustaining means.  My 
definition of this term is that a device that exhibits this mode will continue 
indefinitely to put out the same amount of heat without any input power 
required to drive it after initial ignition.  Perhaps you do not agree with 
this definition?



Indefinitely should not be part of it, since these systems tend to stop for 
unknown reasons, as Mizuno's did. I would stick to Fleischmann's definition, 
which is that the system runs far longer than it would with any chemical source 
of fuel.


In Rossi's case, it not only ran without input, it got hotter, which proves 
there was some source of input.


 

  Also, we must choose a minimum time frame during which this constant power is 
generated if we are to ensure that stored heat or chemical heating is not the 
source of the energy.



That's easy. Just use rocket fuel as your baseline. In a closed cell the fuel 
has to to include the oxygen, as rocket fuel does. You also have to have a 
delivery system, or the cell will explode. Needless to say, there is no 
delivery system or rocket fuel or any other fuel in Rossi's device.


 

   A few hours is far too short of a period if we are serious.



No it isn't too short. Not if you confirm there is no rocket fuel or any other 
chemical fuel in the cell, in amounts large enough to be seen with the naked 
eye. A mass of chemical fuel large enough to produce this much heat is 
macroscopic. You can easily see it.


 

  And, in the case of Rossi's demonstration, the temperature of the device was 
drifting downward and not steady throughout the test.



No, it was increasing. The increase is readily apparent. The only way it could 
be false is if the demonstration was fake.


- Jed



 



Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Abd ul-Rahman Lomax

At 03:55 PM 9/23/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:

David Roberson mailto:dlrober...@aol.comdlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Do you recall an event mentioned by FP where the device burned it 
way through a table or floor?



That as the cube I referred to. I listed it in my book. There are 
no photos or other physical evidence, I am sorry to say. As far as I 
know, electrolysis was running when this occurred.


Maybe. We may not have any way to find out, though Pons' son Joey 
might know better than anyone. Beaudette, Excess Heat, Why Cold 
Fusion Prevailed, writes (2nd edition, 2002, p. 36):


By the late fall of 19843, the experiment had been running 
continuously for several months. At one point, Pons raised the 
current from its nominal rate of 0.75 amperes to 1.5 amperes, and 
that the end of the day, sent Joey to turn off the current. They 
left the laboratory for the night.


Joey came in the next morning and found the experiment in a shambles.


In the Preliminary Note (1989), PFH wrote:

We have to report here that under the conditions of the last 
experiment, even using
D2O alone, a substantial portion of the cathode fused (melting point 
1554 deg. C), part of
it vapourised, and the cell and contents and a part of the fume 
cupboard housing the

experiment were destroyed.


Beaudette addes a report from Kevin Ashley, a graduate student of 
Pons at the time, stating that,


The bench was one of those black top benches that was made of very, 
very hard material. There were cabinets under on end of the bench, 
but the experiment was near the middle where there was nothing 
underneath. I was asonished that there was a hole through the thing. 
The hole was about a foot in diameter. Under the hole was a pretty 
good pit in the concrete floor. It may have been as much as four inches deep.


What really surprised me, Ashley continued, was that Stan and 
Martin Fleischmann had those looks on their face as though they were 
the cat that had just swallowed the canary. They were happy about 
what had happened. I was rather surprised by this, very surprised by this.


A centimeter cube of palladium, heavily loaded with deuterium. That's 
a lot of deuterium, but ... it's difficult to imagine a chemical 
accident that would generate the heat necessary to do what was 
described. One can determine the heat available from assuming very 
high loading, say, 95%, it was quite likely less than that. This heat 
would not be immediately available, though. If we imagine that the 
cube started degassing with power off, there wouldn't be a reason to 
expect ignition. The release of deuterium from palladium is 
endothermic. The gas would simply be generated and would escape. 
There is only a little oxygen in the cell, but it would be an 
explosive mixture at this point. The fumes was still dust in the air, 
Ashley reports, in the morning, so the explosion probably didn't 
happen immediately. As the palladium deloaded, it would cool and also 
flush the oxygen out of the cell.


If it were ignited, the flame would heat the palladium, increasing 
degassing, but the flame would be limited by the available oxygen, 
and it would rather quickly be quenched, I'd expect, by the water 
vapor. Only if the cell were breached by an explosion would more 
oxygen be available, and I'd expect flame, not an explosion. Only 
right at the beginning of this process would there be an explosive 
mixture, but later, ignition would not be possible, I'd think. No 
source of oxygen in the cell.


Now that we know that PdD can sometimes trigger D fusion, regardless 
of what the mechanism is, and we also know about Heat After Death as 
a commonly reported phenomenon -- i.e., a heat burst, which can last 
a long time, after the electrolytic current is turned off -- the 
meltdown isn't so mysterious. They got one whopper of a heat burst. 
They -- and nearly everyone after them -- scaled down, because they 
might have been lucky. What if that heat burst was at the low end of 
possibility rather than the high end, as we tend to assume, given how 
difficult it's often been to set up the Fleischmann-Pons Heat Effect?


Palladium is 12 g/cm^3. Its atomic weight is 106.42. So the number of 
moles of Pd is 12/106.42, or 0.113. For simplicity, let's assume a 
tad under 1:1 loading, so we have about a tenth of a mole of 
deuterium. The enthalpy of combustion for hydrogen (close to that of 
deuterium) is 286 kJoules per mole. So there is about 29 kJ available 
from combustion. To raise a tenth of a mole of palladium about 1500 
degrees to the melting point will take, from the molar heat capacity 
of 25.98 J/(mole*deg K), about 3.9 kJ, and another 1.7 kJ to actually melt it.


So there is enough energy available; however, the problem would be 
releasing this energy so rapidly and with such efficiency of transfer 
to the palladium, that the palladium would be heated to melting. The 
image here would be of a flaming piece of palladium. There could be 
no oxygen inside the 

[Vo]:Save the Balloon!

2012-09-23 Thread Jeff Berkowitz
The world faces an unimaginable fate: the demise of the helium balloon.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-19676639

Only LENR can save us!

 ;-)
Jeff


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Do you consider this an out of control cold fusion device?  It certainly
 has that appearance to me.


Of course it was out of control. However, as far as I know, when the
runaway reaction began the cell was undergoing electrolysis. It did not
begin to go out of control in heat after death mode. Obviously by the time
the cathode reached the table top the cell was shattered and the cathode
was in H.A.D. mode.

There is no evidence that H.A.D. causes a runaway reaction, but the obverse
is true. A runaway reaction causes H.A.D. when it interrupts electrolysis.

Actually, anyone can cause H.A.D. anytime while doing a cold fusion
experiment that is producing anomalous heat. Just turn off the power. The
anomalous heat continues for a while. This is probably not a particularly
significant or important quality. It just proves that the input power is
only needed to keep the hydride at high loading. Hydrides do not deload
instantaneously, so the reaction is bound to continue for a while. Input
power does not cause or modulate output power, except indirectly, by
loading the cathode or stimulating it with a high temperature or flux. The
ratio between the two is pretty much meaningless, as I said. With gas
loading, the ratio is governed by the quality of the insulation. That's not
profound. It is not even interesting. There is nothing to be learned from
it.

- Jed


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
Eric, I chose the nickel since it has a composition that resembles the wire 
used by Celani in his recent demonstration.  This was recommended by someone 
else and I thought the idea was great.  Nickels are easy to come by.


Today I picked up some pencil lead of .9 mm size #2 and replaced my stainless 
steel electrode.  By this time the stainless has some serious stains and rust 
appears to be in my electrolyte.  Meanwhile I located some sodium carbonate by 
Arm  Hammer to use instead of the borax.


I just began the experiment about an hour ago and one thing stands out already. 
 Thus far I have a clean electrolyte instead of one loaded with all kinds of 
oxides.


Initially I was worried about the 1 amp flowing through the pencil lead but it 
does not seem to get hot and should last under this condition.  It just appears 
so tiny when I am used to large diameter wires.


This is a learning experience for me and I notice something rather interesting 
that I am sure is common knowledge among experienced platers.  I measure a 
voltage drop of approximately 2.5 volts from the nickel electrode to the very 
close by electrolyte.  I noted about the same drop when using the stainless 
steel electrode.  This represents a power dissipation of 2.5 watts that seems 
to be within the electrolyte active region surrounding the electrodes.  Most of 
my wasted power is merely heating the electrolyte directly due to ohmic loss.


Perhaps I should delay heating of a hydrogen loaded nickel as it might be 
risky.  I will attempt that when I am feeling lucky.


At the moment my hydrogen loading system is taking 1 amp at about 20 volts.  
The voltage reading varies greatly depending upon the spacing between the 
electrodes as expected with a resistive electrolyte.


Dave



-Original Message-
From: Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 12:10 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck 
Sites


On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 12:36 AM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:


I read that carbon rods could be obtained at craft stores so I might take a 
trip to find one if my stainless is a problem.  Did someone mention that iron 
might be a catalyst in Rossi's device?  I guess I might get some for this 
experiment by default.


Wikipedia says that US nickels are 75 percent copper.  If you don't want copper 
increasing resistivity (and Joule heating) you might need to look for something 
other than US nickels.  Pure nickel in natural abundances will not be expected 
to do anything under hydrogen-1 capture, by the way, although short-lived 
isotopes of it will.  Nearby isotopes, such as copper and cobalt, can 
participate.  So if proton or deuteron capture are what are happening, this 
suggests that Andrea Rossi really does need a catalyst, or he needs nickel with 
impurities, and it gives support to the idea that constantan would be better 
than pure nickel.



I had a mischievous thought of heating the hydrogen loaded nickel in some 
manner to see if that started a reaction.



I personally like this idea, although it does sound dangerous.  It's hard to 
imagine what people are thinking when they take vessels of hydrogen and some 
material and then pressurize them to many atmospheres and heat them to high 
temperatures.  That sounds like a death wish.  From what I've seen with 
transitions in carbon under deuteron capture, oxygen will evolve, so if there 
are any carbon-based impurities, you will have a nice combination of: oxygen, 
deuterium, heat, high pressure.


Given the possibility of the electrolyte participating in the reaction as well 
as all of the challenges of electrolysis, I wonder whether gas phase systems 
might do a better job at controlling some of the important variables.  The gas 
phase systems eliminate questions about the electrolyte and, in some setups, 
the question of input power.  As Jed has mentioned, in some gas phase systems 
you can simply expose the active material to ambient, unheated hydrogen and 
you'll see an effect -- these are the zeolite experiments, I think.  I kind of 
like Nick Reiter's approach, here.  He's getting around the difficulty of 
working with pressurized hydrogen by using a KH slurry that releases hydrogen.  
One unknown here is what happens to the potassium, since it will transition to 
argon under proton capture.  I believe he is heating his setup.


Nothing I say here should discourage you from using electrolysis or otherwise 
affect how you do your experiment!  I'm part of the peanut gallery.


Eric



 


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Eric Walker
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 6:00 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

At the moment my hydrogen loading system is taking 1 amp at about 20 volts.
  The voltage reading varies greatly depending upon the spacing between the
 electrodes as expected with a resistive electrolyte.


I'm enjoying the crazy tabletop experiment a little more than I should.

Let's see -- a nickel coin, pencil lead, borax ...  Maybe you can work out
and document a simple protocol for others, and then do large run of the
experiments, and, using statistical analysis, show that there's a
significant difference in the integrated temperature series in the cell
with the nickel versus the cell with the pencil lead.  Just for fun, you
could use a simple mercury thermometer rather than something fancy; there
would be no end to the amusement if LENR could be convincingly established
using stuff that can be found in one's home.

Eric


Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread David Roberson
The first extremely crude experiment is to learn how to handle the components.  
That seems to be coming along well when you look at the first approach where I 
used table salt and two nickels.  Next, it was with sodium bromide which 
behaved quite a bit better but still was seriously gooping up the electrolyte 
when two nickels were used.  It was hard to keep the oxide layer clean enough 
to get any significant current into the system.  Of course I had to find 
something less reactive so I obtained a stainless steel child's table spoon for 
the inactive electrode.


This setup works far better than the others, but after many hours of running 
the stainless forgot it was not supposed to stain.  The electrolyte started to 
have a rust color and I decided to improve things.  So, I purchased a better 
known electrolyte which is sodium carbonate and some mechanical pencil leads.  
The tiny lead can apparently handle 1 amp of current and is holding up well 
thus far.  My electrolyte is still very clear and there are no noticeable 
deposits within it.  Furthermore, now my nickel which is connected to the 
negative supply terminal does not show any tarnish whatsoever.  I can not 
detect a line on its surface where the electrolyte line occurs either.


I guess you could say my technique has improved significantly!  I plan to let 
this system run for a few days and see if anything unusual shows up.


Later I might make the setup far more controlled if anything of interest 
appears.  That is when I will use a thermal probe of some sorts and might begin 
accurate documentation.  I am still learning the basics and want to try several 
insane ideas before I get too serious.


It really would be incredible if it is possible to construct a simple LENR 
device at home, but at the moment I am betting that it is not going to work.  
Eric, you should put one of these into operation to improve the chances of 
success.  The same applies to others of the vortex, there is plenty of room 
available for you to join in and have a bit of fun.


I am seeing a significant quantity of hydrogen bubbling off the nickel and 
oxygen leaving the pencil lead.  There is a temptation to light a match


Dave 



-Original Message-
From: Eric Walker eric.wal...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 9:30 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck 
Sites


On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 6:00 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:



At the moment my hydrogen loading system is taking 1 amp at about 20 volts.  
The voltage reading varies greatly depending upon the spacing between the 
electrodes as expected with a resistive electrolyte.




I'm enjoying the crazy tabletop experiment a little more than I should.


Let's see -- a nickel coin, pencil lead, borax ...  Maybe you can work out and 
document a simple protocol for others, and then do large run of the 
experiments, and, using statistical analysis, show that there's a significant 
difference in the integrated temperature series in the cell with the nickel 
versus the cell with the pencil lead.  Just for fun, you could use a simple 
mercury thermometer rather than something fancy; there would be no end to the 
amusement if LENR could be convincingly established using stuff that can be 
found in one's home. 


Eric


 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi: Neutrons? : COP200, Linearity

2012-09-23 Thread Abd ul-Rahman Lomax

At 07:53 PM 9/23/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:

David Roberson mailto:dlrober...@aol.comdlrober...@aol.com wrote:

Do you consider this an out of control cold fusion device?  It 
certainly has that appearance to me.


Of course it was out of control. However, as far as I know, when the 
runaway reaction began the cell was undergoing electrolysis. It did 
not begin to go out of control in heat after death mode. Obviously 
by the time the cathode reached the table top the cell was shattered 
and the cathode was in H.A.D. mode.


As I wrote, but Jed may not have read yet, Beaudette has that Pons' 
son turned off the power before they left for the evening.


However, that doesn't quite make sense to me. Turning off the power 
would allow loss of deuterium, which is not what they generally wanted.


HAD could explain the triggering of the event, which would be a 
combination of heat high enough to break or melt the glass cell, 
plus, then, combustion of the deuterium. My own analysis, such as it 
is, expects that the burning of deuterium would not get the palladium 
hot enough to melt, because most of the heat from combustion would 
not transfer to the metal. It would be like the burner in a gas 
stove: it gets hot, but not very hot, not as hot as the flame. Most 
of the heat goes up in the air.


It occurred to me that if the palladium got very hot, it would burn 
rapidly through the bench, and sitting on the floor, the rising 
deuterium gas would burn, thus creating the *large* hole in the lab 
bench (and filling the air with smoke as reported). I still find it 
hard to understand why there would be so much damage to the floor. 
Normally you can build a fire on concrete and it doesn't do much. So 
it must have been very hot palladium, would molten palladium do it? 
It may have gotten hotter than that.


This thing did not explode, it burned. (and apparently some of the 
palladium vaporized, which is entirely too hot for explanation by the 
burning of the deuterium, though I didn't calculate that specifically.)


To repeat, one of the difficulties of generating so much heat 
chemically, quickly enough to melt the palladium, would be getting 
enough oxygen quickly enough to the deuterium gas. That's why 
ordinary flames are nowhere near as hot as torches where oxygen is 
supplied under pressure like the combustible gas is. And a candle 
flame doesn't burn the wick, except high up, where the wax doesn't reach.


There is no evidence that H.A.D. causes a runaway reaction, but the 
obverse is true. A runaway reaction causes H.A.D. when it interrupts 
electrolysis.


But that could amplify a runaway reaction. HAD doesn't normally melt 
stuff However, the reaction is generally considered to increase 
with temperature. There is danger of runaway there, and that may have 
happened with the 1985 meltdown.


If the cell in 1985 started heating rapidly enough, the heavy water 
would boil away, so even if this didn't start out as HAD, it would become that.


Actually, anyone can cause H.A.D. anytime while doing a cold 
fusion experiment that is producing anomalous heat. Just turn off 
the power. The anomalous heat continues for a while.


Sometimes. Sometimes the heat dies down pretty much with the thermal 
inertia of the system. For example, look at P14 in the P13/14 pair, 
when they lower the electrolytic power back to the trickle. XP 
declined rapidly, back to the noise level.


 This is probably not a particularly significant or important 
quality. It just proves that the input power is only needed to keep 
the hydride at high loading. Hydrides do not deload 
instantaneously, so the reaction is bound to continue for a while. 
Input power does not cause or modulate output power, except 
indirectly, by loading the cathode or stimulating it with a high 
temperature or flux. The ratio between the two is pretty much 
meaningless, as I said. With gas loading, the ratio is governed by 
the quality of the insulation. That's not profound. It is not even 
interesting. There is nothing to be learned from it.


It's purely political. For research purposes, it's enough that the 
calorimetry is calibrated and confirmed. It does not matter if power 
is externally supplied or is looped back from output, say as 
self-heating. XP is XP. Because of heat/helium -- and even before 
that, from all the excellent calorimetry that has been done -- we are 
beyond needing to prove there is excess heat. It's real. It is only a 
question of research convenience. It's easier to control if devices 
are not designed to self-power. Self-power, then, is not important 
for research, but only for killer demonstrations, which are a 
commercial phenomenon, really. They tell us nothing, and if people 
doubt the results, they can still doubt them with apparent 
self-power, and some will.


Rossi has quite a few demonstrations he has done which convinced 
some. None of them are equivalent to what exists with PdD cold 
fusion: independent replication and 

Re: [Vo]:Good Alloy for Celani type reaction costs 5 cents : Chuck Sites

2012-09-23 Thread Abd ul-Rahman Lomax

At 08:29 PM 9/23/2012, Eric Walker wrote:
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 6:00 PM, David Roberson 
mailto:dlrober...@aol.comdlrober...@aol.com wrote:


At the moment my hydrogen loading system is 
taking 1 amp at about 20 volts. Â The voltage 
reading varies greatly depending upon the 
spacing between the electrodes as expected with a resistive electrolyte.



I'm enjoying the crazy tabletop experiment a little more than I should.

Let's see -- a nickel coin, pencil lead, borax 
... Â Maybe you can work out and document a 
simple protocol for others, and then do large 
run of the experiments, and, using statistical 
analysis, show that there's a significant 
difference in the integrated temperature series 
in the cell with the nickel versus the cell with 
the pencil lead. Â Just for fun, you could use a 
simple mercury thermometer rather than something 
fancy; there would be no end to the amusement if 
LENR could be convincingly established using 
stuff that can be found in one's home.Â


Sure. It's not very likely, though. Still, trying 
stuff is fun, and you never can tell what you will find.


Be careful. You are evolving hydrogen, which  is, 
of course, flammable. I don't think that nickel 
loads much hydrogen, but I do suggest treating it 
as flammable. So if you heat it, be prepared for 
it to start to burn furiously. That would definitely happen with palladium.